False, I always dream big and nerves or fears don't enter the equation. There isn't enough time on this earth for a single person to let things like that stand in the way. Jump off the cliff and trust the water is deep enough, at the very least you'll enjoy the trip down I say.

The next person is currently trying to develop a taste for something once disliked.

Last edited by Hisoka on Mon Apr 11, 2011 8:57 pm; edited 1 time in total (Reason for editing : spelling mistake)

False by a couple of days. Because of Monday I've been so out of it that I've been doing nothing but laying about trying to draw... but even that's taking to much effort. If anything I'm doing nothing to try to remain awake.

True, The Scroll Lock key was meant to lock all scrolling techniques, and is a remnant from the original IBM PC keyboard, though it is not used by most modern-day software. In the original design, Scroll Lock was intended to modify the behavior of the arrow keys. When the Scroll Lock mode was on, the arrow keys would scroll the contents of a text window instead of moving the cursor. In this usage, Scroll Lock is a toggling lock key like Num Lock or Caps Lock, which have a state that persists after the key is released.Today, this particular use of Scroll Lock is rare. Only a few modern programs still honor this behavior, such as Lotus Notes, Forté Agent, FL Studio, and Microsoft Excel. Most GUI environments neglect scroll lock, which means scrolling must be accomplished with a computer mouse, using means such as scrollbars or scroll wheels. Therefore, the Scroll Lock key is little used in almost all current programs and operating systems.

The next person is counting the days till Vancouver wins the Stanley cup.

True, it was a series that ran on CBC about the lives of video gamer designers. jPod chronicles the often shocking lives of Ethan Jarlewski and four of his co-workers at Neotronic Arts as they confront "Chinese gangs, boneheaded bosses, sexual swinging, British royalty and gore-laced video games.".[4] The pod was created by a Y2K glitch, which caused workers with surnames beginning with the letter J to be grouped together. The group works in a pod in the basement and were nicknamed jPod by the company.

It was a classic in it's own time and it was killed off in it's prime.

The next person is hoping that the slightly red brown stains on their shirt isn't blood.